strategies for individuals · web viewfinger exercises sit at a table. move fingers as if playing...

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City of Bradford MDC 0-25 Specialist Teaching & Support Services Margaret McMillan Tower (Floor 3) SCIL (Social, Communication, Interaction Hand Activities Prior to any fine motor activity begin with input into muscles and joints of the whole arm – chair/wall press ups, squeeze stress balls/plasticine with finger tips and thumb. Hand turning – place hands down on table. Turn left palm up. Now turn right palm up at the same time as the left hand turns palm down. Keep turning, speed up until the rhythm breaks down. Gather a crepe bandage using fingers and then thumb. Clenched fist – both hands on the table, one clenched, one stretched out. Swap clenching and stretching, building up rhythm and pace. Drumming fingers – using tabletop. Tap each finger in order, then reverse the order, one hand followed by the other. Threading beads – one hand holds string while other hand threads beads. Make a chain of paperclips Use tweezers to pick up and place a number of small objects into a container. Use bubble wrap and practice popping bubbles Handwriting Resource/Programmes ‘Write from the Start’ by Lois Addy and Ion Teodorescu – a perceptuo-motor approach to handwriting. LDA/Amazon ‘Speed Up!’ by Lois Addy– programme for children aged 8-13 with slow laborious handwriting – helps to reduce pressure used. ‘Motor Skills United’ – develops motor & perceptual skills A wide variety of different grips/pens/scissors/ slopes/resources are available from www.tts- group.co.uk Nessy Fingers – ICT programme to develop keyboard skills. The Jungle Journey – whole class fine & gross motor skills programme. LDA. Revised Structured Cursive Writing – www.annarbor.co.uk Excellent website for cursive writing – www.kidzone.ws/cursive/ Twinkl have a variety of guides and activity packs to support handwriting – www.twinkl.co.uk Free, adaptable worksheets – www.worksheetgenius.co.uk

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Strategies for Individuals

Hand Activities

· Prior to any fine motor activity begin with input into muscles and joints of the whole arm – chair/wall press ups, squeeze stress balls/plasticine with finger tips and thumb.

· Hand turning – place hands down on table. Turn left palm up. Now turn right palm up at the same time as the left hand turns palm down. Keep turning, speed up until the rhythm breaks down.

· Gather a crepe bandage using fingers and then thumb.

· Clenched fist – both hands on the table, one clenched, one stretched out. Swap clenching and stretching, building up rhythm and pace.

· Drumming fingers – using tabletop. Tap each finger in order, then reverse the order, one hand followed by the other.

· Threading beads – one hand holds string while other hand threads beads.

· Make a chain of paperclips

· Use tweezers to pick up and place a number of small objects into a container.

· Use bubble wrap and practice popping bubbles

Handwriting Resource/Programmes

· ‘Write from the Start’ by Lois Addy and Ion Teodorescu – a perceptuo-motor approach to handwriting. LDA/Amazon

· ‘Speed Up!’ by Lois Addy– programme for children aged 8-13 with slow laborious handwriting – helps to reduce pressure used.

· ‘Motor Skills United’ – develops motor & perceptual skills

· A wide variety of different grips/pens/scissors/ slopes/resources are available from www.tts-group.co.uk

· Nessy Fingers – ICT programme to develop keyboard skills.

· The Jungle Journey – whole class fine & gross motor skills programme. LDA.

· Revised Structured Cursive Writing – www.annarbor.co.uk

· Excellent website for cursive writing – www.kidzone.ws/cursive/

· Twinkl have a variety of guides and activity packs to support handwriting – www.twinkl.co.uk

· Free, adaptable worksheets – www.worksheetgenius.co.uk

Developing

Handwriting

Skills

Cognition and Learning Team

Handwriting Difficulties

Observable Characteristics:

· Shoulders hunched – abnormal posture

· Head almost on the table/resting on arm

· Poor paper positioning

· Poor alignment of work on page

· Letters vary in size and height

· Mixed upper and lower case letters

· No regularity of spacing

· Inaccurate/incomplete letter formation

· Reversals, inversions, fragmented

· Inaccurate hand-eye coordination

· Mirror writing

· Margins increase

· Awkward pencil grip

· Heavy or light pressure used

· Complains of aching wrist/hand

Classroom Adaptations

· Work on fine motor skills before letter formation

· Teach cursive writing early

· Consider a sloping surface

· Provide templates for paper position

· Consider paper with raised lines or coloured lines

· On the whiteboard, mark the beginning and end of each line with a shape or number (different colour for each line)

· Limit copying from the board

· Left-handers sit to the left

· When writing in books, use green and red spots to show start and finish – ‘stop & go paper’ – see resources

· Furniture sizes – with adaptations

· Hand aerobics/chair press ups

· Use on-screen word and sentence banks e.g. Clicker 5

· Encourage alternatives ways of recording/planning

Strategies for Individuals

· Hand and finger exercises / rhymes / activities

· Air tracing beginning with circular movements

· Mazes and pathways

· Dot-to-dot

· Finger painting

· Sand/lentil tray to trace letters or words

· Trace letters on table or hand

· Try out a variety of pencil grips, pens and pencils

· Use of wrist weights to help increase pressure

· Light-up pens to reduce pressure

· Teach keyboard/IT skills

Activities to Encourage the Development of Fine Motor Control

Finger Exercises

· Sit at a table. Move fingers as if playing fast piano music.

· Sit with heel of hands together with fingers curled, fingertips apart. Touch corresponding tips one at a time. Try and do it faster and faster.

· Use playdoh/plasticine/clay to squash and roll.

· Use pegs to clip onto a card or paper plate.

· Pop bubble wrap with thumb and index finger.

· Place a soft ball in palm of hand. Tap it with one finger at a time.

· One hand at a time, wriggle fingers individually. Try to keep other fingers still.

· Turn cube in fingers.

· Put pegs in a pegboard and take them out.

· Build a tower with building blocks or play Jenga.

· Use tactile & kinaesthetic awareness to reinforce learning – air writing letters with whole arm & body movements.